The Joint Commission Awards Gold Seal of Approval to Disease Management Programs
Alexian Brothers Hospital Network has earned Disease- Specific
Care Certification from The Joint Commission for the network's
commitment to excellence in 13 disease management programs. In
recognition of the achievement, The Joint Commission has awarded its
Gold Seal of ApprovalTM
for health-care quality to each of the programs. Alexian Brothers
Behavioral Health Hospital in Hoffman Estates, Ill., became the
first hospital in the nation to win certification in four separate
psychiatric specialties: depression, chemical dependency, eating
disorders and self injury.
Meanwhile, Alexian Brothers Medical Center in Elk Grove Village,
Ill., and St.Alexius Medical Center in Hoffman Estates each earned
certification for their congestive heart failure, joint replacement,
oncology and bariatric surgery programs. The Joint Commission also
certified ABMC's acute myocardial infarction (heart-attack) program.
Each of the disease management programs underwent an extensive,
unannounced on-site evaluation by a team of reviewers from The Joint
Commission, which announced the results early this year.
Two years ago, The Joint Commission certified the stroke programs at
ABMC and St.Alexius. The certifications mean that ABHN "does the right
things and does them well" for patients in the certified disease
management programs, says Jean E. Range, The Joint Commission's
Executive Director, Disease-Specific Care Certification. ABHN
voluntarily pursued the certifications "to enhance the safety and
quality of the care we provide," says Diana Woytko,Vice President,
Patient Safety and Quality, for ABHN. "We're proud to achieve this
distinction. It makes a statement to the community that we take quality
of care seriously." More important, though, was the amount of learning
that occurred as ABHN teams prepared their disease management programs
for The Joint Commission's evaluations.
For about nine months, each team thoroughly examined its program's
structure and processes, comparing them against best practices and
identifying strengths and areas for improvement. This process increased
interaction among ABMC and St.Alexius teams examining the same disease
management programs at their respective hospitals." They were working
together across both acute-care facilities, with learning from each
facility to theother," says Woytko, who credits Barb Swanson, ABHN
Director of Accreditation, for orchestrating the certification efforts.
Examples of enhancements that resulted from these efforts include:
- PET scans for all patients newly diagnosed with non-small
cell lung cancer." Through this indicator,we can significantly improve
the decision-making process for treatment for the patient and family,"
says Karen Munter, Oncology Project Manager.
- New protocols
that have enabled heart-attack victims requiring emergency angioplasty
to receive the treatment faster than they did in the past at ABMC.
- Increased
education and testing for nurses and patient-care technicians who care
for bariatric-surgery patients,with certain staff members acting as
resources on bariatric issues for their peers. In addition, all ABMC
and St. Alexius staff members must take an obesity-sensitivity class.
- Improved educational materials for ABBHH patients with major depressive disorder.
- Additional heart-failure education for nurses.
"It was all about going through the process, "Woytko says." That's what
impressed The Joint Commission - the facts and data that were gathered
and analyzed and the actions that were taken." The teams will continue
to measure their programs' progress, relaying information about
improvements to The Joint Commission one year after the programs'
initial certifications.The programs must undergo an on-site review by
The Joint Commission every two years to be considered for
re-certification.